106 Ky. 791 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court. •
Appellants and appellee own neighboring farms. Between their lands there was a ridge, which prevented the water falling on appellee’s land from flowing down naturally over appellants’ land. Both farms lie in a very level section, where there is difficulty about drainage. Some years ago the owners of the land above the ridge, and some of those below, united in an undertaking to cut a ditch in a southerly direction, through the ridge, to Panther creek,
On the return of the case the defendant tendered an amended answer, in which he set out that Miller, while cleaning out the ditch, was acting as the agent and servant of appellee, McAlister; that appellee, with others, employed Mm to dig the ditch, and knew of the suit, testified in it as a' witness, and that Miller was only their agent in the transaction. The court below refused to allow the amended answer to be filed, holding, in effect, that the judgment was no protection as to acts done under it, though not superseded. There was then another trial, resulting in a verdict for $1,000 in favor of appellee.
The main question arising on this appeal is as to the effect of the reversed judgment on acts done under it and in obedience to it before its reversal, when it was not super
But a subsisting judgment, though afterwards r&versed, is a sufficient justification for all acts done by plaintiff in enforcing it prior to the reversal. Thus, if the defendant be taken in execution, the subsequent reversal of the judgment will not render the plaintiff liable to an action for false imprisonment; for the act of imprisonment, when directed by the plaintiff, was sanctioned by a then valid judgment.”
And in section 104b the same author says:
“The case of a judgment set aside for irregularity differs materially from that of one reversed upon appeal. In the latter case the error for which the judgment is ultimately avoided is imputed to the court, and the parties are not left without protection for the acts which they have done, based upon the judgment, and upon their confidence in the correctness of the decisions of the court.”
The same principles are laid down in Black on Judgments, sections 170, 355. In Kaye v. Kean, 18 B. Mon. 847, Kean obtained a mandamus against Kaye, which he refused to obey, and, being imprisoned for disobedience, brought suit against Kean, upon a reversal of the judgment awarding the mandamus, for damages for his imprisonment. His petition was dismissed. The court said:
“The judgment of the circuit court was not void, but merely erroneous. ... So long, therefore, as the judgment remained in force unsuspended and unreversed, it was the duty of the appellant to have rendered obedience to it. His contumacy subjected him to be proceeded against for a contempt, and as, therefore, there was sufficient cause for his imprisonment, he can not maintain an action therefor against the appellee.”
“A judgment igi a final and conclusive determination of the rights of the parties to the litigation, and until it shall be reversed, vacated or modified in some one of the modes provided by law the parties can not refuse to obey it; nor can they, by subsequent litigation, indemnify themselves against its legal consequences.”
In Fraser’s Ex’r v. Page, 82 Ky. 73, an executor who had paid out a fund under a judgment which was not superseded, and afterwards reversed, was held protected by it for acts done in obedience to it while in force. The same ruling was made in McKee v. Smith’s Adm’r., 5 Ky. Law Rep., 224; Shultz v. Beatty, 6 Ky. Law Rep. 662; Showalter v. Simmons, 5 Ky. Law Rep. 423; Dudley v. Beatty, 5 Ky. Law Rep., 773.
These cases proceed upon the principle that what was lawful when done does not become unlawful by reason of subsequent acts. The chancellor in entering the judgment in the case referred to, did not act as the agent of either of the parties. The judgment was the act of the law. Neither party could control the court, and neither was responsible for his actions. The law constituted a tribunal to determine the rights of the parties. That determination, proceeding from a power above them, was in no sense their act. A litigant in this court does not procure the judgment entered in any such sense as to render him responsible for the consequence of the judgment, or its reversal by the United States Supreme Court. We have been referred to no case, and can find none, where an action for damages has been sustained upon the reversal of a judgment for acts done pursuant to it, as for a tort. The fact that there are no precedents for such recovery seems at this day conclusive that it has not
Appeals may be taken from judgments, ordinarily, within two years, but sometimes within five or twenty years, and it would often produce intolerable hardship to hold a litigant responsible for the consequences of an erroneous judgment under such circumstances. The object in having trust estates, including those of decedents, or those assigned-for the payment of debts, settled in equity under the direction of the chancellor, is to protect the parties in the payment of the money, as well as to secure to every one his rights. A creditor with a small .claim, who moved for a distribution -of the fund, would, under the rule referred to, be responsible for the entire fund upon a reversal of the judgment, although he had received only a few dollars of it. Such a rule would destroy all confidence in judgments of courts, and make them the prolific parent, in many cases, of ruinous litigation.
The case of Hays v. Griffith is disapproved so far as it may be construed to lay down a different rule.
It remains to determine whether appellee was bound by the 'original judgment -while it was in force.
In Freeman on Judgments, section 17á, the rule is thus stated:
“Neither the benefits of judgments on the one side nor the obligations on the other are limited exclusively to parties and their privies. Or, in other words, there is a numerous and impor*800 tant class of persons who, being neither parties upon the record nor acquirers of interest from those parties after the commencement of the suit, are nevertheless bound by the judgment. Prominent among those are persons on whose behalf and under whose direction the suit is prosecuted or defended in the name of some other person.”
In Herman on Estoppel and Res Adjudicata, sections 150-152, it is said:
“One who is benefitted by the prosecution of an action of which he has notice is to be regarded as a party in interest, although his name does not appear therein.
“A master or principal is in privity with Ms servant or agent when the latter defends an action in the right of the former, and a judgment is an estoppel to a renewal of the principal or master in the suit on the ground that he is considered the real party, and especially when the principal expressly or impliedly authorized or ratified the acts of the agent, virtually rendering him a party to the proceedings instituted by or against the other.
“In such cases the technical rule that a judgment can only be admitted between the parties to the record or their privies expands so as to admit it when the same question has been decided and judgment rendered between parties responsible for the acts of others.”
These conclusions are sustained by Emery v. Fowler, 63 Am. Dec., 627; Hill v. Bain, 2 Am. St. R., 873, [23 Atl., 44]; Robbins v. City of Chicago, 4 Wall., 672,—where many other authorities are collected. This subject was fully considered by this court in the case of Schmidt v. L., C. & L. R. R. Co., 99 Ky., 143, [35 S. W., 135, and 36 S. W., 168],
This question was not before the court on the last appeal of the. case, and what was said then must be taken in reference to what was before
The rule is well settled that a question not in issue, though passed upon in the opinion on a prior appeal, is not res judicata on a subsequent appeal, where the issue was properly made by pleadings filed after the first appeal. (See note to City of Hastings v. Foxworthy, 34 Lawy. Rep. Ann., 344, s. c. [63 N. W., 955]), and cases cited.) Thus in O’Brian v. Com., 6 Bush, 563, it was held that a discharge of a juror after the jury was sworn, without the defendant’s consent, did not operate to acquit him. But when this opinion was rendered there had been no plea of former jeopardy.. On the return of the cause to the lower court the defendant put in this plea, and, having been again convicted on a second appeal, the former opinion' was held not to include the question, and the defendant was discharged. 9 Bush, 333, [15 Am. R., 715], This rule has the indorsement of the United States Supreme Court, and seems to us sound, and necessary to the proper administration of justice. (Barney v. Winona, etc., Railroad Co.., 117 U. S., 228, [6 Sup. Ct., 654].)
The judgment complained of is therefore reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to- the court below to grant appellant a new trial, to allow the amended answer '“xx-l” and “x-1” and “x-2” to be filed, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.